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John Kerry: Lacking Character
What was the body of evidence that prisoners were held back? A short list would include more than 1,600 firsthand sightings of live U.S. prisoners; nearly 14,000 secondhand reports; numerous intercepted Communist radio messages from within Vietnam and Laos about American prisoners being moved by their captors from one site to another; a series of satellite photos that continued into the 1990s showing clear prisoner rescue signals carved into the ground in Laos and Vietnam, all labeled inconclusive by the Pentagon; multiple reports about unacknowledged prisoners from North Vietnamese informants working for U.S. intelligence agencies, all ignored or declared unreliable; persistent complaints by senior U.S. intelligence officials (some of them made publicly) that live-prisoner evidence was being suppressed; and clear proof that the Pentagon and other keepers of the “secret” destroyed a variety of files over the years to keep the P.O.W./M.I.A. families and the public from finding out and possibly setting off a major public outcry…The Kerry committee’s final report, issued in January 1993, delivered the ultimate insult to history. The 1,223-page document said there was “no compelling evidence that proves” there is anyone still in captivity. As for the primary investigative question ‘what happened to the men left behind in 1973′the report conceded only that there is “evidence . . . that indicates the possibility of survival, at least for a small number” of prisoners 31 years ago, after Hanoi released the 591 P.O.W.’s it had admitted to.
With these word games, the committee report buried the issue’and the men.
The huge document contained no findings about what happened to the supposedly “small number.” If they were no longer alive, then how did they die? Were they executed when ransom offers were rejected by Washington?
Kerry now slides past all the radio messages, satellite photos, live sightings, and boxes of intelligence documents’all the evidence. In his comments for this piece, this candidate for the presidency said: “No nation has gone to the lengths that we did to account for their dead. None’ever in history.”
Of the so-called “possibility” of a “small number” of men left behind, the committee report went on to say that if this did happen, the men were not “knowingly abandoned,” just “shunted aside.” How do you put that on a gravestone?
In the end, the fact that Senator Kerry covered up crucial evidence as committee chairman didn’t seem to bother too many Massachusetts voters when he came up for re-election’or the recent voters in primary states. So I wouldn’t predict it will be much of an issue in the presidential election come November. It seems there is no constituency in America for missing Vietnam P.O.W.’s except for their families and some veterans of that war.
A year after he issued the committee report, on the night of January 26, 1994, Kerry was on the Senate floor pushing through a resolution calling on President Clinton to lift the 19-year-old trade embargo against Vietnam. In the debate, Kerry belittled the opposition, saying that those who still believed in abandoned P.O.W.’s were perpetrating a hoax. “This process,” he declaimed, “has been led by a certain number of charlatans and exploiters, and we should not allow fiction to cloud what we are trying to do here.”
Kerry’s resolution passed, by a vote of 62 to 38. Sadly for him, the passage of ten thousand resolutions cannot make up for wants in a man’s character.
This is, to my mind, the most disgusting episode in the history of the United States military. I worked with the MIA families in 1973-75 and never have loyal, patriotic Americans been treated more shabbily. BTW, Kerry had business ties to Vietnam. Oddly enough.
Filed under: American Politics, Congress, Military, Politics








